Here’s the cool envelope that my vendor from Antwerp, Belgium, put the stamps in that I had bought.
The stamp was issued in 2021, and it depicts a cycling jersey.
The 2021 UCI Road World Championships was between 19 and 26 September 2021 in the Flanders region of Belgium.
Narcissus is a genus of predominantly spring flowering perennial plants of the amaryllis family, Amaryllidaceae. Various common names including daffodil, narcissus, and jonquil are used to describe all or some members of the genus.
No matter what size the pie (the circle) is, its circumference divided by its diameter is always pi*.
*The number pi (symbol π) is a mathematical constant and is a transcendental number (a number that is not algebraic—that is, not the root of a non-zero polynomial of finite degree with rational coefficients).
The value of pi is approximately 3.14159.
Pi appears in many formulas in mathematics and physics.
We changed over to Daylight Saving Time here in the USA last night.
The Sunday after changing the time forward— or back— always feel a little weird to me.
For the record, my opinion about changing the time on the clock twice a year: it’s STUPID.
Cartoon by Ellis Rosen for The New Yorker Magazine, for the Mon. Mar 13th, 2023 issue.
Here are a few pictures from along Westlake Avenue and Lenora Street.
We still don’t know what will happen to the Cinerama movie theater, even though it’s been more than three years since Paul Allen had passed away.
The swank new apartment building on Lenora Street is The Modern.
Sample rents:
1 bed, 1 bath, 499 sq ft: $2,791 – $2,986.
3 beds, 2 baths, 1,666 sq ft – $8,830.
The Indian Wells Open (BNP Paribas Open) tennis tournament is underway in California.
Friendly fans pitched in to help dry the court tonight, after a burst of rain early in the evening. I like those spongy squeegees— they will come in handy for drying up the tennis courts here in Seattle.
It’s a team effort in Stadium 4 to get the courts dry. An official coaches some fans using the squeegee rollers. The rain interrupted the match between Denis Shapovalov (age 24, Canada) and Ugo Humbert (23, France). In the end Shapovalov prevailed 7-5 6-4. [Still from a video clip posted by Bailey Arredondo @BaileyKESQ on Twitter]
This poster on a lamp post calls for Peace in Ukraine, a cause which we can all support— but when one takes a closer look, it quickly gets very complicated.
Yes, the US should not have invaded Iraq in March 2003.
Does that mean the US should also not supply weapons to Ukraine? Only food and shelter with heat, now that all the cities are getting destroyed by Russia’s invasion?
I don’t think so.
There’s a logo at the bottom of the poster that says ‘Party for Socialism and Liberation’. Is that an American political party? Yes. Wikipedia: The Party for Socialism and Liberation is a communist party in the United States, established in 2004.
The New York Times posted pictures shared by their readers in California, of the snow there. I like this one.
A geodesic dome in the Santa Cruz mountains. The snowpack in the vast Sierra Nevada mountain range is the deepest it’s been in decades, exceeding 200% of the normal snowpack depth in some areas. [Photo by Karrie Gaylord]
I tagged along with Bryan and Gary to Hansville on Kitsap Peninsula today.
We did the usual drive-around south of Puget Sound across the Tacoma-Narrows Bridge by Gig Harbor, and then came back across the Sound on the Kingston ferry.
The Space Needle picture was a telephoto lens shot (on my big camera, not the phone) from I-5 South, looking across Lake Union.
‘Early bird catches the worm’
– Proverbial saying first recorded in English in 1605
Mr Robin* found an earthworm on my front lawn this afternoon, and promptly made a meal of it.
Robins can actually eat as many as a dozen earthworms in a single day.
I took the No 10 bus to downtown, and here are a few pictures.
On the No 10 bus and Approaching the stop at Pine At & 9th Ave. Hello to the red Tesla Model 3 (it’s a 2022 model). John Mellencamp (he’s 71) is coming to the Paramount Theatre. It made me look up and play ‘Hurt So Good’ on YouTube. 😁We now have our own Uniqlo* clothing store here in downtown Seattle, in the Macy’s building (there have long been Uniqlo stores in Southcenter Mall and in Bellevue Square). *Japanese casual wear designer, manufacturer and retailer.The Terminal Sales Building on 1st Avenue is an 11-story historical landmark designed in a terra cotta and brick Gothic-inspired mode by architect Henry Birman. Built in 1923 in an open loft format, it served as a sales and display warehouse that serviced department stores in Seattle’s retail core for decades. [From website historylink.tours]Here’s the windows of the Patagonia store (outdoor clothing and gear). Hanford is a site in southeast Washington State where 9 nuclear reactors had been built during World War II and the Cold War to produce plutonium for the nation’s nuclear weapons program. To date 6 of the 9 reactors have been cocooned (sealed off). Cocooning lasts for 75 years, and allows radiation levels to decay to a safer level for future dismantling and disposal. Leaks of radioactive material have already occurred, though. Every now and then there seems to be another exposé on King5 TV about the challenges with the cleanup of Hanford. During the World War II and Cold War years, the site’s focus was on plutonium production. Now, efforts are geared at cleanup of one of the most contaminated nuclear sites in the world.The corner of Virginia St and 1st Avenue is the site of a bistro and full bar today. I see on Google Maps that the State Route 99 tunnel’s route happens to run by right below it.Here’s Second Avenue between Pike & Pine. The brown building on the left is going to demolished at some point not too far into the future to make way for a 46-story, 531-unit apartment building with retail stores.The State Hotel building on Second Avenue was constructed in 1904 by the Eitel brothers David and Fred, and called the Eitel building. It was renovated in 2017-19 at a cost of $16 million. I had dawdled too long on Second Avenue, and here comes my No 10 bus rushing by— the one that was supposed to take me home. I ended up walking back to Capitol Hill !Welp. The sun’s gone again, and it’s getting cold. Time to go home. The site of the erstwhile Starbucks on Olive Way now has fencing and barbed wire to keep the riffraff out.
Yesterday’s envelope with my stamps had this 1987 stamp on the outside.
In 1839, a big locomotive was ordered by the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, with the specification that the engine burn anthracite coal in a horizontal boiler. The result was the Gowan & Marx, one of the most famous locomotives ever built. Extraordinary tractive power was generated by the 42-inch driving wheels.
It was dark by the time the mailman came today, but he dropped an envelope with a bunch of stamps I had ordered from a seller in California.
So it was all worth the wait.
The Big Five* (Rhinoceros, Buffalo, Lion, Leopard and Elephant) is a very popular and recurring theme on South African stamps and barely a year or two goes by, before yet another set of stamps with The Big Five on them is issued. The strip of Big Five animal stamps at the top of the picture is from 1996, and the ones in the foreground are from 1998. *Must-see animals to spot when going on safari in southern Africa
Rivian has delivered some 1,000 electric delivery vehicles (EDVs) to Amazon since July of last year— for deliveries in cities such as Baltimore, Chicago, Dallas, Nashville, San Diego and here in Seattle.
This is only the start: the goal is for Rivian to deliver 100,000 of the EDVs to Amazon.
Amazon-branded delivery vehicle by Rivian, parked on 19th Avenue here on Capitol Hill. The headlights are in hazard mode, flashing on and off. It’s a matter of form following function for the truck. It is not sleek and sporty, but it has spacious cabin and cargo areas, superior visibility with the wrap-around windshield, automatic emergency braking, 360-degree cameras, and ventilated seats for fast heating and cooling. It goes 150 miles on a full charge.
When I go to Elysian’s Capitol Hill brewery, I check the out the vehicles at the Electrify America charging station across from it.
Tonight there was a Volvo XC40 Recharge compact SUV and a Rivian R1T pickup truck (Montana plates) getting a charge.
The Electrify America charging station off Madison Street (it has 4 charging bays). Website Elektrek reports that there are currently more than 160,000 EV chargers in the United States (charging bays). They project that the United States will need to quadruple the number of public EV chargers between into 2025, and double that again by 2030, to meet the charging needs of EVs— even taking home charging into account.
The clouds have cleared, and there is a nice view of the Venus-Jupiter conjunction* tonight in the Western night sky here tonight.
Hopefully the sky will be clear tomorrow night as well, when they will appear to be even closer.
*Conjunction means two astronomical objects appear close to each other in the sky, as seen from our view on Earth. Jupiter is still some 400 million miles away from Venus (on average 416 million miles away).
From EarthSky.org: Throughout February 2023, Venus and Jupiter shine brightly in the west after sunset. They edge closer together throughout the month. On the evening of February 28, 2023, they are approaching a close conjunction. As seen from the Americas, their closest pairing is shortly after sunset on March 1. After their conjunction, Venus will continue its reign as our bright “evening star” until August 2023. Jupiter will disappear in the sunset glare sometime in March. [Chart via John Jardine Goss / EarthSky]
The MSCI USA Index is a stock market index that measures the performance of large- and mid-cap companies in the U.S. It was down by 19.46% in 2022, but up more than 20% in each of the previous three years.
It was a rough week in the US stock market last week, and today went better.
Still, the uncertainty around inflation and a recession in 2023 is not going to be resolved for several more months.
Writes James McIntosh for the Wall Street Journal under a heading ‘Markets History 101: It’s Time to Buy Bonds‘: Even after their big falls, stocks still look very expensive compared to bonds. The optimism that started this year has faded, but investors continue to bet that long-run inflation will come back under control and profit margins will stay high. And many remain wary of bonds, even as yields approach 4% on the 10-year Treasury and are above 5% on six-month bills.
The central lesson of financial history is that, over the long run, U.S. stocks beat bonds. But buying stocks when they are expensive—at 18 times estimated earnings for the next 12 months, they have rarely been pricier outside the dot-com bubble and the post-pandemic boom—is a recipe for substandard returns.
Here is a high-resolution scan of a little stamp, only 1 in. x 0.8 in.
It was on the envelope that had stamps in that I had bought from a seller in Canada.
The micro-printed text running along the mountain ridge says Kootenay National Park— and I believe this is Mount Fay there, on the border of Alberta and British Columbia on the Continental Divide in the Canadian Rockies. The stamp was designed by Stéphane Huot from a photo by Roger Hostin. It is one of the stamps in a series called ‘Far and Wide’ issued in 2020.Set in the Rocky Mountains of southeastern British Columbia, Kootenay National Park is a 1,406 square km (543 sq mi) area straddling the Kootenay River.